Arcanobacterium Haemolyticum Type Strain (11018)

Arcanobacterium Haemolyticum Type Strain (11018)

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Recent Work Title Complete genome sequence of Arcanobacterium haemolyticum type strain (11018). Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/03f632gf Journal Standards in genomic sciences, 3(2) ISSN 1944-3277 Authors Yasawong, Montri Teshima, Hazuki Lapidus, Alla et al. Publication Date 2010-09-28 DOI 10.4056/sigs.1123072 Peer reviewed eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California Standards in Genomic Sciences (2010) 3:126-135 DOI:10.4056/sigs.1123072 Complete genome sequence of Arcanobacterium T haemolyticum type strain (11018 ) Montri Yasawong1, Hazuki Teshima2,3, Alla Lapidus2, Matt Nolan2, Susan Lucas2, Tijana Glavina Del Rio2, Hope Tice2, Jan-Fang Cheng2, David Bruce2,3, Chris Detter2,3, Roxanne Tapia2,3, Cliff Han2,3, Lynne Goodwin2,3, Sam Pitluck2, Konstantinos Liolios2, Natalia Ivanova2, Konstantinos Mavromatis2, Natalia Mikhailova2, Amrita Pati2, Amy Chen4, Krishna Palaniappan4, Miriam Land2,5, Loren Hauser2,5, Yun-Juan Chang2,5, Cynthia D. Jeffries2,5, Manfred Rohde1, Johannes Sikorski6, Rüdiger Pukall6, Markus Göker6, Tanja Woyke2, James Bristow2, Jonathan A. Eisen2,7, Victor Markowitz4, Philip Hugenholtz2, Nikos C. Kyrpides2, and Hans-Peter Klenk6* 1 HZI – Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research, Braunschweig, Germany 2 DOE Joint Genome Institute, Walnut Creek, California, USA 3 Los Alamos National Laboratory, Bioscience Division, Los Alamos, New Mexico, USA 4 Biological Data Management and Technology Center, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California, USA 5 Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, USA 6 DSMZ - German Collection of Microorganisms and Cell Cultures GmbH, Braunschweig, Germany 7 University of California Davis Genome Center, Davis, California, USA *Corresponding author: Hans-Peter Klenk Keywords: obligate parasite, human pathogen, pharyngeal lesions, skin lesions, facultative anaerobe, Actinomycetaceae, Actinobacteria, GEBA Arcanobacterium haemolyticum (ex MacLean et al. 1946) Collins et al. 1983 is the type spe- cies of the genus Arcanobacterium, which belongs to the family Actinomycetaceae. The strain is of interest because it is an obligate parasite of the pharynx of humans and farm ani- mal; occasionally, it causes pharyngeal or skin lesions. It is a Gram-positive, nonmotile and non-sporulating bacterium. The strain described in this study was isolated from infections amongst American soldiers of certain islands of the North and West Pacific. This is the first completed sequence of a member of the genus Arcanobacterium and the ninth type strain genome from the family Actinomycetaceae. The 1,986,154 bp long genome with its 1,821 protein-coding and 64 RNA genes is a part of the Genomic Encyclopedia of Bacteria and Archaea project. Introduction Strain 11018T (= DSM 20595 = CCM 5947 = ATCC and emended by Lehnen et al. in 2006 [6]. The ge- 9345 = NBRC 15585) is the type strain of the spe- neric name drives from the Latin word ‘arcanus’, cies A. haemolyticum, which is the type species of meaning ‘secretive’ and the Latin word ‘bacte- its genus Arcanobacterium [1]. Arcanobacterium is rium’, a small rod, meaning ‘secretive bacterium’ one of six genera in the family Actinomycetaceae [1]. The species epithet is derived from the Latin [2-4]. The genus currently consists of nine validly word ‘haema’ meaning ‘blood’ and the Neo-Latin described species. The strain was first described word ‘lyticus’ meaning ‘able to loose or able to dis- in 1946 by MacLean as ‘Corynebacterium haemoly- solve’ referring to blood-dissolving or hemolytic ticum’ [5]. Based on chemical features and the when the cells grow on blood agar [1]. There are presence of unique phenotypic characteristics, the many medical case reports that A. haemolyticum is strain was subsequently transferred to the new occasionally isolated in patients with brain ab- genus Arcanobacterium as A. haemolyticum [1] scess [7-9], cellulitis [10,11], endocarditis [12], The Genomic Standards Consortium Yasawong et al. meningitis [13], peritonitis [14], post-traumatic quence similarity) [27]. No phylotypes from envi- ankle joint infection [15], septic arthritis [16], sep- ronmental screening or metagenomic surveys ticemia [17], sinusitis [11], soft tissue infections could be linked to A. haemolyticum or even the [18], venous ulcer infection [19], vertebral osteo- genus Arcanobacterium, indicating a rare occur- myelitis [20] and wound infection [21,22]. Only rence of these species in the habitats screened rarely are cases reported in animals, where pa- thus far (as of July 2010). A representative genom- thogenicity of A. haemolyticum has not been well ic 16S rRNA sequence of A. haemolyticum 11018T documented [23-25]. Here we present a summary was compared using BLAST with the most resent classification and a set of features for A. haemoly- release of the Greengenes database [28] and the ticum strain 11018T, together with the description relative frequencies of taxa and keywords, of the complete genomic sequencing and annota- weighted by BLAST scores, were determined. The tion. five most frequent genera were Arcanobacterium (42.4%), Dermacoccus (12.6%), Actinomyces Classification and features (10.8%), Terrabacter (9.9%) and Sanguibacter Strain 11018T is an obligate parasite of the pha- (5.7%). The five most frequent keywords within rynx of human and farm animals; occasionally it the labels of environmental samples were 'skin' causes pharyngeal or skin lesions [26]. The strain (6.6%), 'human' (5.0%), 'feedlot' (4.6%), 'elbow' was isolated from infections in American soldiers (3.4%) and 'microbiota' (3.3%). The BLAST key- [5]. The 16S rRNA gene sequence of strain 11018T words analysis supports the biological insights (AJ234059) is 99% identical to six culturable into A. haemolyticum strain 11018T as described strains that were reported in GenBank (status July above. 2010). Five strains were isolated from infected Figure 1 shows the phylogenetic neighborhood of horses [23]. Another culturable strain, Tr2-2X-1 A. haemolyticum strain 11018T in a 16S rRNA (FJ477385), was isolated from gasoline contami- based tree. The sequences of the four 16S rRNA nated soil. The 16S rRNA gene of strain 11018T gene copies in the genome differ from each other shares 93.3-97.9% sequence identity with the se- by up to two nucleotides, and differ by up to five quences of the type strains from the other mem- nucleotides from the previously published se- bers of the genus Arcanobacterium [27]. The next quence generated from CIP 103370 (AJ234059) closest relative outside of the genus Arcanobacte- which contains one ambiguous base call. rium is Dermacoccus barathri MT2.1T (92.3% se- Figure 1. Phylogenetic tree highlighting the position of A. haemolyticum strain 11018T relative to the type strains of the other species within the genus Arcanobacterium and to the type strains of the other genera within the family Actinomycetaceae. The trees were inferred from 1,388 aligned characters [29,30] of the 16S rRNA gene sequence under the maximum likelihood criterion [31] and rooted in accordance with the current taxonomy. The branches are scaled in terms of the expected number of substitutions per site. Numbers above branches are support values from 1,000 bootstrap replicates [32] if larger than 60%. Lineages with type strain genome sequencing projects reg- istered in GOLD [33] are shown in blue, published genomes in bold. The cells of strain 11018T are slender or irregular fast and without endospores [1]. In young cul- rods (0.3-0.8 × 1.0-5.0 µm) [Table 1 and Figure 2]. tures, cells may show clubbed ends sometimes The cells are Gram-positive, nonmotile, not acid- arranged in V formation, but there are no fila- http://standardsingenomics.org 127 Arcanobacterium haemolyticum type strain (11018T) ments. In older cultures, cells segment into short, galactosidase, β-glucosidase, β-glucuronidase, leu- irregular rods and cocci [1]. Strain 11018T is facul- cine arylamidase, lipase (C14), α-mannosidase, tatively anaerobic. The cells grow slowly on nu- naphthol-AS-BI-phosphohydrolase, trypsin, valine trient agar, but grow better on horse blood agar, arylamidase and urease [1,6]. Strain 11018T is not giving small, convex, translucent colonies sur- able to ferment adonitol, L-arabitol, erythritol, D- rounded by a zone of complete hemolysis after fructose, glycerol, glycogen, D-mannitol and D- two days at 37°C [1]. The selective medium for xylose. It is resistant to oxytetracycline (30µg per this strain was developed by Coman [39] and con- disc) but susceptible to nalidixic acid (30µg per tains 5% sheep blood and 3.5% of NaCl. Cell disc), sulfamethoxazole trimethoprim (25µg per growth is enhanced by the addition of CO2 [1]. The disc), amikacin (10µg per disc) or cefoxitin (30µg optimum growth temperature is 37°C [1,26]. Cells per disc) [1,42]. do not withstand heating at 60°C for 15 min [1,5]. Strain 11018T is chemoorganotrophic and re- Chemotaxonomy quires nutritionally rich media for growth [1,26]. Strain 11018T The fermentative metabolism of this strain pro- based on L-Lys-L-Lys-D-Glu (unpublished, Norbert duces acid but does not produce gas from glucose Weiss [43]). Thepossesses predominant peptidoglycan menaquinone type A5α is and several other carbohydrates on which growth MK-9(H4) (85%) complemented by 15% MK-8(H4) occurs [1,26]. Acid production is mainly acetic, [6]. The major cellular fatty acids when grown on lactic and succinic acids [1,26]. Catalase, nitrate blood agar at 35°C are straight-chain unsaturated reduction and gelatine hydrolysis reactions are acids C18:1 ω9c (37.0%), and saturated acids C18:0 T negative [6]. Strain 11018 produces N-acetyl-β- (24.7%), C16:0 (22.5%) [6], which is similar to the galactosidase, alkaline phosphatase, extracellular cellular fatty acids spectrum reported from cells DNase, β-galactosidase, α-glucosidase and pyrazi- grown on sheep blood agar [31]: C18:1 cis9 (29%), namidase. It does not produce acid phosphatase, C16:0 (23%), C18:2 (18%), C18:0 (17%), C10:0 (3%) α-chymotrypsin, cystine arylamidase, esterase and C14:0 (2%). (C4), esterase lipase (C8), α-fucosidase, α- Figure 2.

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